نتایج جستجو برای: crustacean cardioactive peptide

تعداد نتایج: 162177  

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2010
Carolina Möller Christian Melaun Cecilia Castillo Mary E Díaz Chad M Renzelman Omar Estrada Ulrich Kuch Scott Lokey Frank Marí

Crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP) and related peptides are multifunctional regulatory neurohormones found in invertebrates. We isolated a CCAP-related peptide (conoCAP-a, for cone snail CardioActive Peptide) and cloned the cDNA of its precursor from venom of Conus villepinii. The precursor of conoCAP-a encodes for two additional CCAP-like peptides: conoCAP-b and conoCAP-c. This multi-pepti...

Journal: :Journal of insect physiology 2001
Donini Agricola Lange

Crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP) stimulates the contractions of locust oviducts. CCAP increased the basal tonus and increased the frequency and amplitude of phasic contractions, as well as the amplitude of neurally-evoked oviduct contractions in a dose-dependent manner. Oviducts from Vth instar larvae and adult locusts aged 10 days or less, were more sensitive to CCAP than oviducts from a...

2013
Jean-Yves Toullec Erwan Corre Benoît Bernay Michael A. S. Thorne Kévin Cascella Céline Ollivaux Joël Henry Melody S. Clark

BACKGROUND The Ice krill, Euphausia crystallorophias is one of the species at the base of the Southern Ocean food chain. Given their significant contribution to the biomass of the Southern Ocean, it is vitally important to gain a better understanding of their physiology and, in particular, anticipate their responses to climate change effects in the warming seas around Antarctica. METHODOLOGY/...

2016
Wilson Mena Sören Diegelmann Christian Wegener John Ewer

Neuropeptides play a key role in the regulation of behaviors and physiological responses including alertness, social recognition, and hunger, yet, their mechanism of action is poorly understood. Here, we focus on the endocrine control ecdysis behavior, which is used by arthropods to shed their cuticle at the end of every molt. Ecdysis is triggered by ETH (Ecdysis triggering hormone), and we sho...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2004
Anthony C Clark Marta L del Campo John Ewer

To complete each molting cycle, insects display a stereotyped sequence of behaviors to shed the remains of the old cuticle. These behavioral routines, as well as other related physiological events, are critical for proper development and are under the control of several neuropeptides. Their correct deployment and concatenation depends on the complex actions and interactions among several peptid...

Journal: :Development 2003
Jae H Park Andrew J Schroeder Charlotte Helfrich-Förster F Rob Jackson John Ewer

Insect growth and metamorphosis is punctuated by molts, during which a new cuticle is produced. Every molt culminates in ecdysis, the shedding of the remains of the old cuticle. Both the timing of ecdysis relative to the molt and the actual execution of this vital insect behavior are under peptidergic neuronal control. Based on studies in the moth, Manduca sexta, it has been postulated that the...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1997
B Mulloney H Namba H J Agricola W M Hall

Crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP) elicited expression of the motor pattern that drives coordinated swimmeret beating in crayfish and modulated this pattern in a dose-dependent manner. In each ganglion that innervates swimmerets, neurons with CCAP-like immunoreactivity sent processes to the lateral neuropils, which contain branches of swimmeret motor neurons and the local pattern-generating...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2001
P K Loi S A Emmal Y Park N J Tublitz

The crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP) gene was isolated from the tobacco hawkmoth Manduca sexta. The gene has an open reading frame of 125 amino acid residues containing a single, complete copy of CCAP. Analysis of the gene structure revealed three introns interrupting the coding region. A comparison of the M. sexta CCAP gene with the Drosophila melanogaster genome database reveals signifi...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2007
Timothy J Fort Keyla García-Crescioni Hans-Jürgen Agricola Vladimir Brezina Mark W Miller

In regulating neurophysiological systems, neuromodulators exert multiple actions at multiple sites in such a way as to control the activity in an integrated manner. We are studying how this happens in a simple central pattern generator (CPG)-effector system, the heart of the blue crab Callinectes sapidus. The rhythmic contractions of this heart are neurogenic, driven by rhythmic motor patterns ...

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